marija wrote:Is it bad that I don't have an answer to this question yet?

Edit: To clarify: starting 1L in a couple of weeks.

No. Knowing the type of law you want to practice isn't necessary until you are about to start practicing law (interviewing--> starting somewhere) It's not bad to have a general idea, but most firms want you to try your hand at a few different things before you commit to something.

This is pretty much what I thought, but I'm just curious because it's the question that EVERYONE seems to be asking me. When it's random people it doesn't bother me, but lawyers ask me that question and I don't know what to say. I usually ask them if they knew what kind of law they wanted to practice when they were starting law school, but I wonder if I should just make something up so they don't think I'm another clueless kid just going to law school because I think it's a golden ticket to wealth and prestige.

marija wrote:This is pretty much what I thought, but I'm just curious because it's the question that EVERYONE seems to be asking me. When it's random people it doesn't bother me, but lawyers ask me that question and I don't know what to say. I usually ask them if they knew what kind of law they wanted to practice when they were starting law school, but I wonder if I should just make something up so they don't think I'm another clueless kid just going to law school because I think it's a golden ticket to wealth and prestige.

Yah, I get this question a lot from attorneys as well. I just say that I don't know but I think I'd like to do either criminal or civil litigation. That has the virtue for being both broad and specific enough to be a jumping off point for a covo. Got a 1L summer job offer while using this response.

Maybe I'm way off-base, but I feel like that's mostly like people asking, "so, what's your major", when you were in undergrad. Probably just as much trying to start a conversation as anything else. (Exception being at OCI, I imagine. They probably want to see how you think, what prompted your decision in law, how you could fit into their firm) I think it's more important to respond sounding intelligent than having a firm answer.

"I realize that the vast majority of law students end up wanting to practice something different than they had hoped to when they started law school. That being said, right now I'm really attracted to the xxxx aspects of xxxxx law, and the xxxx of xxxx"

Better than, "Oh gosh... I don't know. I was just sick of retail so here I am!"

TommyK wrote:"I realize that the vast majority of law students end up wanting to practice something different than they had hoped to when they started law school. That being said, right now I'm really attracted to the xxxx aspects of xxxxx law, and the xxxx of xxxx"

Oh my god is this relevant. I got this question again today for the billionth time, and I'm just an 0L. My answers have evolved over time:

1) I have no idea2) I have an engineering degree, so patent law?3) I have an engineering degree, so everyone says patent law. But I kind of want to keep an open mind.4) It doesn't matter until I get to working in a firm anyway, so who cares?

I'll tell you what kind of law I want to practice: appellate litigation or legal scholarship. But I recognize that this is like dreaming about playing in the NFL or about nailing Scarlett Johansson: fun, but not remotely likely. From now on I'm going to stick with (3) above.

rynabrius wrote:TTH: Thanks for the tip. I haven't read it, I just assumed there was some truth in advertising.

A little more than "it's worthless." I read the descriptions for most of the corporate transactional specialities, and they all read the same. Ditto for the different types of litigation. Not a lot of useful info.

rynabrius wrote:TTH: Thanks for the tip. I haven't read it, I just assumed there was some truth in advertising.

A little more than "it's worthless." I read the descriptions for most of the corporate transactional specialities, and they all read the same. Ditto for the different types of litigation. Not a lot of useful info.

That is too bad. I found "Guerrilla Tactics" to be very helpful, and they are from the same publisher. You have dissuaded me from following my plan to get "Guide". I s'pose the internet is still the ultimate resource.

marija wrote:This is pretty much what I thought, but I'm just curious because it's the question that EVERYONE seems to be asking me. When it's random people it doesn't bother me, but lawyers ask me that question and I don't know what to say. I usually ask them if they knew what kind of law they wanted to practice when they were starting law school, but I wonder if I should just make something up so they don't think I'm another clueless kid just going to law school because I think it's a golden ticket to wealth and prestige.

This question is asked from all directions: the maintenance guy at my apartment, the barista at the cafe, the furniture delivery people, waitresses, bartenders ...

Bumi wrote:Oh my god is this relevant. I got this question again today for the billionth time, and I'm just an 0L. My answers have evolved over time:

1) I have no idea2) I have an engineering degree, so patent law?3) I have an engineering degree, so everyone says patent law. But I kind of want to keep an open mind.4) It doesn't matter until I get to working in a firm anyway, so who cares?

I'll tell you what kind of law I want to practice: appellate litigation or legal scholarship. But I recognize that this is like dreaming about playing in the NFL or about nailing Scarlett Johansson: fun, but not remotely likely. From now on I'm going to stick with (3) above.

Same, but I don't really know what my "dream" area of law is. I like to think it's patent lit, but who knows.